With no major legislative accomplishments to his name, President Donald Trump is reportedly planning to sign several more executive orders this week as he races to pad his résumé ahead of his 100th day in office. Trump, who once blasted his predecessor’s use of executive actions as “major power grabs of authority,” is now on track to sign nearly three dozen executive orders before reaching the symbolic milestone—more than any other president since World War II.

Last week, Trump pre-emptively dismissed the importance of the 100-day mark as a “ridiculous standard,” and this weekend told the Associated Press that because he didn’t start working on health care right away, he was really only on Day 60. Still, with his legislative agenda stalled and a government shutdown looming, the milestone is clearly weighing on Trump—and inspiring a flurry of activity within the West Wing. Citing a White House source, Axios reports that the president is expected to sign four executive orders by Friday, bringing his total to at least 32 actions. According to the report, the executive orders will curtail restrictions on offshore gas and oil exploration; bolster accountability and whistle-blower protections at the Department of Veterans Affairs; create a task force focused on issues impacting rural America; and task the Department of the Interior to review monument designations made by previous presidents under the Antiquities Act. Politico reports that Trump could also sign an executive order on cyber-security by week’s end, but notes that the highly anticipated order won’t include modernizing the federal government’s I.T. infrastructure, which will be the focus of a separate directive under the leadership White House senior adviser Jared Kushner.

Trump’s imminent executive order spree is reflective of the president’s growing frustration with the slow-moving pace of the Washington bureaucracy and a string of early failures that have stymied his “America First” agenda. The anticipated executive actions will be part of a broader weeklong push by the White House to control the narrative of Trump’s first 100 days in office by packing the president’s schedule with events and promoting his accomplishments, such as Neil Gorsuch’s appointment to the Supreme Court and the rolling back of government regulations, culminating in a rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday night. One Trump administration official described the strategy for the week as “us being busy every day.”

Democrats, meanwhile, are already casting Trump’s first 100 days as “100 Days of Broken Promises to American Families.” Politico reports that Democrats plan to spend the week highlighting the gap between Trump’s Oval Office achievements and the bold, sweeping promises he made on the campaign trail, particularly those on trade and to working and middle-class Americans. “President Trump’s first 100 days have been a disastrous parade of broken promises to working people, handouts to wealthy special interests, and deep damage to the health and economic security of America’s families,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said in a statement.

Trump’s reliance on executive orders—and the messaging battle over his first 100 days—speaks to the broader problems facing the Republican Party as it struggles to evolve from an opposition movement to a governing party. The G.O.P. is at a crossroads on health care, tax reform, trade, and other issues where lawmakers have suddenly been forced to confront deep ideological divisions within both chambers of Congress. That identity crisis could come to a head later this week, just as Trump hits his 100-day mark, when the government is set to run out of money. Republicans are reportedly eager to avoid a government shutdown on April 28, but the White House, as usual, is making things more difficult by demanding that Democrats accede to funding for Trump’s proposed border wall between the U.S. and Mexico—a multi-billion-dollar boondoggle that Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer have refused to support. The electoral fallout for the G.O.P. and Trump, whose approval ratings are already at the lowest level of any president at the same point in office, could be dire. “The majority is not safe,” Tom Cole, a Republican congressman from Oklahoma and a member of G.O.P. leadership, told Politico. “We need to be more constructive legislatively, and there are going to be political implications if we don't."